….As India Oil Import From Africa Jumps
Yemisi Izuora
An internal report by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, OPEC, has shown that Nigeria and Iraq were the least compliant in an agreement by the body to slash production over the May-July period.
This is coming as India’s oil imports from Africa jumped to their highest in 10 months in August as refiners switched out more expensive crude from the Middle East, shipping data provided by trade sources showed.
The world’s third biggest oil importer shipped in about 3.95 million barrels per day (bpd) of oil in August, the highest volume since April, with African nations accounting for about 17.5 per cent, or an eleven month high of 688,000 bpd, the data showed.
“Spot prices of west African oil versus Brent were down in the most part of July compared with June. That along with lower freight offered an opportunity to buy Nigerian oil,” said Ehsan Ul Hag, analyst with Refinitiv.
He said in order to raise revenue, Nigeria was supplying more oil in July than it pledged under a production cut agreement between Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, OPEC, and its allies, while Angola was scouting for a new market after the Chinese cut purchases.
“And the new home was India.”
Strengthening diesel cracks also prompted Indian refiners to buy African grades, while an increase in official selling prices by key gulf producers including Saudi Arabia deterred them, Haq said.
India also shipped in Venezuelan oil in August after a gap of two months as Reliance Industries obtained permission from the US to swap diesel for oil.
Higher intake of Nigerian and Venezuelan oil lifted the share of OPEC’s oil in India’s overall August imports to 77.6per cent, the highest since January, from 67.2per cent last month, the data showed.
OPEC’s share was, however, at a record low over the April-August period, the first five months of the fiscal year.
The share of Middle Eastern oil shrank to 62.4per cent, the lowest in three months, from 71.3 per cent last month, while that of Latin America rose to 9.7per cent from 6.3per cent.
During the month Iraq remained the top oil supplier to India followed by Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates. Nigeria, which was the 8th largest supplier to India in July, rose to No.4, pushing the US to fifth position.
Kuwait stayed at No. 6 while Venezuela, replaced Colombia, as the seventh top supplier.